Peggy Levitt is professor and chair of the sociology department at Wellesley College and an Associate at Harvard University's Weatherhead Center for International Affairs and Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organization where she co-directs the Transnational Studies Initiative. Peggy writes regularly about globalization, arts and culture, immigration, and religion. Her latest book, Artifacts and Allegiances: How Museums Put the Nation on Display, is published by the University of California Press.
Biography
Levitt is professor and chair of the sociology department at Wellesley College and the co-director of the Transnational Studies Initiative at Harvard. Levitt was the CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the American University of Cairo in March 2015 and a Robert Schuman Fellow at the European University Institute in summer 2015. In 2014, she received an honorary doctoral degree from Maastricht University, held the Astor Visiting Professorship at Oxford University, and was a guest professor at the University of Vienna. She has been a senior visiting scholar at the Universities of Deusto, Latvia, and Valencia in 2013, the visiting international fellow at the Vrije University in Amsterdam from 2010-2012 and the Willie Brandt Guest Professor at the University of Malmö in 2009. Her books include Religion on the Edge, God Needs No Passport: Immigrants and the Changing American Religious Landscape, The Transnational Studies Reader, The Changing Face of Home: The Transnational Lives of the Second Generation , and The Transnational Villagers. She has edited special volumes of Racial and Ethnic Studies, International Migration Review, Global Networks, Mobilities, and the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. A film based on her work, Art Across Borders, released in 2009.
Works
Artifacts and Allegiances: How Museums Put the Nation and the World on Display
Books, Bodies, and Bronzes: Comparing Sites of Global Citizenship Creation. Co-editor of special volume of Ethnic and Racial Studies, Vol 37.
Religion on Edge
The Transnational Studies Reader
God Needs No Passport: Immigrants and the Changing American Religious Landscape
The Transnational Villagers
The Changing Face of Home
Opinion pieces
The Huffington Post, June 11, 2007, “Transnational Problems Need Transnational Solutions”
The Huffington Post, June 6, 2007, “Dios Ha Muerto?”
The Boston Globe, May 27, 2007, “Life, Liberty, and the Folks Back Home”
The Boston Globe, May 27, 2007, “The Global in the Local”
The Huffington Post, May 18, 2007, “Religion Isn’t One-Size-Fits-All”
Seattle Post Intelligencer, May 15, 2007, “’Us vs. them’ mentality holds us back”